Wednesday, May 3, 2017
Sunday, April 30, 2017
FAIR & LOVELY
FAIR AND LOVELY
Finally, he announced for all in the salon to hear: ‘You are dark,
sir. I have a good whitener, 100 percent you will become very fair.’ My aunt,
now long gone, always made a similar remark, without the ‘good whitener’. After
a long winter in New York ,
where the sun barely shone and the cold cut one’s face, my aunt’s first remark
when I visited her was ‘you’ve gone dark’.
I saw what my hair stylist saw. A
brown face. It was the same brown I had been born with, and had never bothered
about. It was part of my package like legs, arms, a head, a pair of eyes and black
hair, thinning fast, on my head. I’ve had my hair cut all over the world, and
the hair stylists have never remarked on my colour. At least, not to my face. He
cut my hair, I paid and walked out. Maybe
he commented to a colleague later ‘that fellow had a brown face’.
Driving home, I stopped for a red light, a rare occurrence in the
city, causing chaos behind me. Cars with red lights never do. A scooter pulled up beside me, driven by a
woman, She wore a long sleeved, winter jacket, zipped up, and grubby white
gloves. She wore a helmet too, which was remarkable enough. It was 40 degrees
in the city but the sun would never dare stain her delicate skin.
During the IPL tournament there was
a commercial of a man running along the beach, having a shower (half naked
muscled torso which made me tuck in my tummy) and then rubbing some stuff on
his face. I thought it was an after shave. But when he brandished a dip stick
showing the varying degrees of lightness, I realized it was a commercial for a
skin whitener.
Of course, we have known for a long
time that we Indian are the most racially conscious people on this planet. The
Australians are amateurs compared to our discerning eyes which can pick the
slightest variations in brown. We’re
obsessed with colour – the matrimonial columns in our newspapers are filled
with ‘fair’ complexioned brides and grooms searching for the perfect colour
match. The Indians we see now in our countless commercials are no longer even a
lighter shade of brown. They are as white as any Anglo-Saxon could ever get.
They are so white on my screen that my eyes hurt. Europeans are actually pink,
not the ghostly white of our commercial models. Thankfully, they still have black hair but, if
the whitener sellers could pull it off, they would be blondes or redheads,
selling us scooters, cell phones and soaps.
What brought us to
this? History? In the earliest days the divide would have been Aryan/
Dravidian. The colour contrast between the nomads of central Asia
and the indigenous natives of the sub-continent. This colour colonialism had to
have continued through the many invasions – the Afghans, the Mughals and,
finally, the whiter than white, though they did turn puce in our Indian sun,
the British. Subconsciously, we equate superiority with colour. White is better
than brown, brown better than black. And as the internet and television invades
our lives, we’re constantly bombarded with images of the white superiority.
Those who leach and bleach their skin, all those super white models in our television
commercials, are embarrassed at their own colour. They yearn for the white that
will equate them with the European. While the Europeans spend billions of
dollars on sun tan lotions, sun beds and lying on hot beaches, so as to look
brown as Indians.
The human race is
never happy with that it’s got, naturally.
Friday, April 28, 2017
ENTER QUEEN LEAR
, written by me,starred Jenny Runacre in the production which ran for 3 weeks at the Drayton
Arms Theatre, London, from September 13th to October 2nd 2016.
An
ageing, glamorous film star falls in love with a younger man, a refugee. Now,
past her cast-by-date, she accepts to play Lear as a woman just to act again.
Throughout rehearsals, she is confronted by the men in her life – two
ex-husbands, two sons and the younger lover. Her only real constant is her
relationship with her long time female dresser.Jenny Runacre said: “I do really think it is a fascinating play, with so many levels in it. It is not very often that an actress is given a role that has so much meat in it.”
If you want to listen to the play, I adapted it for the radio and you can hear it by clicking on the link below.
Monday, April 3, 2017
Doctrate on my writing
There is now a doctorate published on my writings. A bright young man from a university in Pune, now has a Ph.D after reading my novels and non-fiction works. You can check this out on this web link:
Sunday, January 22, 2017
THE AXXISS TRILOGY
THE AXXISS TRILOGY. (Scholastic)
Murari leaves his readers with almost a Sudoku, which until solved, the reader cannot put the books down. Thus, shifting the power to the reader, Murari manages like an astute dramatist to pull his reader into his plot, involving him, engaging him or her, till he has found the answer. He must now join the famous six teenagers searching the meaning of those numbers, put singly, or in a combination, or whatever. - GOODREADS
Murari leaves his readers with almost a Sudoku, which until solved, the reader cannot put the books down. Thus, shifting the power to the reader, Murari manages like an astute dramatist to pull his reader into his plot, involving him, engaging him or her, till he has found the answer. He must now join the famous six teenagers searching the meaning of those numbers, put singly, or in a combination, or whatever. - GOODREADS
Sunday, April 17, 2016
Emperor Ashoka
We forget
the wisdom from our own past.
Emperor Ashoka
304-232 BCE.
Rock Edict
XII.
'Restraint
in speech'.
That is not
praising one's own religion or condemning the religion of others without good
cause...whoever praises his own religion, due to excessive devotion, and
condemns others with the thought 'Let me glorify my own religion' only harms
his own religion. Therefore, contact between religions is good. One should
listen to and respect the doctrines professed by others. Beloved of the gods,
King Piyadassi (Ashoka), desires that all should be learned in the good
doctrines of other religions.
Wednesday, May 6, 2015
PEN Charlie Hebdo
I've not read Charlie Hebdo. My
French is inadequate for satire. I've not seen their cartoons either. Last week
in Paris, I asked my French publisher, Marie-Pierre, for her opinion. She was
fiercely dismissive, calling the magazine crude. She was angry too. Twelve
people were killed in January. One, a friend, was visiting the magazine that
fatal day. He died too. For what? She asked. A cartoon of Mohammed. The
magazine was irresponsible in taunting Muslims.
Last month, American
PEN, awarded Charlie Hebdo its
“freedom of expression courage award”. It split writers. Rushdie and others
supported PEN's choice. Rushdie wrote: "It is quite right that PEN should
honour [Charlie Hebdo’s] sacrifice and condemn their murder without these
disgusting ‘buts." Peter Carey, Teju Cole, and others, condemned it for
'cultural intolerance and Islamophobia.' PEN responded, praising “their (Charlie Hebdo)
dauntless fortitude patrolling the outer precincts of free speech.”
I agree with PEN. What
distinguishes a democracy from a totalitarian state is the freedom of
speech. The freedom to think
imaginatively and to give expression to these thoughts. Freedom of speech
cannot be neatly hedged by 'ifs' or 'buts'. It either exists or it does not. Unfortunately, irresponsibility comes with
the package. Charlie Hebdo insulted
many aspects of French life, including attacking the extreme right wing Le Pen
political party. The party did not respond with machine guns. Islamist
extremists did.
People can be as
insulted by mocking their political beliefs, sexual preferences, social
positions, history, race. Name it, there's an insult to someone out there. As
the world opens up, the minds close. People are frightened by the swift
changes. And to new thinking. If we all
picked up guns, it would not be a revolution but bloody mayhem. Guns are for
those who lack the intelligence to counter the insult or even make a comment
with their own words. A few days ago,
ISIL executed 30 Yazidis. I wondered how they had insulted the Prophet.
Annually, fifty to sixty
journalists, writers or artists are killed because of their work. Many more imprisoned. I admired their courage to express their
thoughts in mostly these despotic nations. They were aware of the dangers.
Sometimes, even a Tweet was their death sentence. Words and drawings frighten
the State, as they do extremists of any kind.
India teeters between
democracy and despotism. Recently, leaning more to the latter. The State has
banned books, the list grows longer daily. Publishers retract; they cannot
afford long court cases. The writer abandoned. Two Tamil writers were driven
from their homes by extremists. Tragically, one stopped writing. Art is
dangerous. Films are tripped up by State appointed censors. If the film passes
(with cuts), others lie in wait to attack it.
Or storm the theatres, forcing it off the screen.
Anyone can rush to court
and take out an injunction against a book, a writer, an artist if his or her
"feelings are hurt". There are 1.2 billion possible feelings to
hurt. Every writer and artist faces this
minefield daily. Some self-censor their thoughts. The State did nothing to
defend or protect our most famous artist, M.F. Hussein. He died in exile. The
writer, Shobha Dey, mocked the Maharastrha government's edict on Marathi Films.
She was summoned to the legislature.
At times, India is
beyond satire. Charlie Hebdo would
have a field day here. For a day or two at least, before our home bred
extremists burned it down.
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